hockeyoligist2
Senior Member
- Location
- close to greenville sc
I'm not sure if this is the right place to post this and I hope I can explain properly!
Last week we had a very large chlorine leak, killed grass, a tree, bushes outside the building. There are two 460v exhaust fans in the room. One of them blew a fuse, a few days later. I checked everything and the only thing I found was a slight ground on the motor (10 M ohms) I put in a new fuse. The other two went south when I turned it back on. The motor had signs of heat damage, the label was peeling off and burned looking (no meggar without going back to the shop). I had a spare so I replaced it. I checked everything again before hooking up the wires and I was getting 10 M ohms on the wires to ground, which I wouldn't think would blow a fuse. I hooked everything up turned it on, blew another fuse.
I disconnected the wires at the starter and the motor. I got 10 M ohms again. I turned off the other fan to compare since they are both in the same conduit and there was nothing to ground. Then while it was still off I rechecked the other fan and there was nothing to ground. I can turn the other fan back on and I get a ground, but very a low 10 M ohms.
This is getting long, I know. So, I will get to my question. Since the pipe is buried in cement I'm sure it is full of water by now, it has probably been there 40 + years. Would the chlorine increase the conductivity between the deteriorating wire insulation? Maybe going phase to phase? This one has me baffled, and I'm normally not baffled easily on troubleshooting.
Last week we had a very large chlorine leak, killed grass, a tree, bushes outside the building. There are two 460v exhaust fans in the room. One of them blew a fuse, a few days later. I checked everything and the only thing I found was a slight ground on the motor (10 M ohms) I put in a new fuse. The other two went south when I turned it back on. The motor had signs of heat damage, the label was peeling off and burned looking (no meggar without going back to the shop). I had a spare so I replaced it. I checked everything again before hooking up the wires and I was getting 10 M ohms on the wires to ground, which I wouldn't think would blow a fuse. I hooked everything up turned it on, blew another fuse.
I disconnected the wires at the starter and the motor. I got 10 M ohms again. I turned off the other fan to compare since they are both in the same conduit and there was nothing to ground. Then while it was still off I rechecked the other fan and there was nothing to ground. I can turn the other fan back on and I get a ground, but very a low 10 M ohms.
This is getting long, I know. So, I will get to my question. Since the pipe is buried in cement I'm sure it is full of water by now, it has probably been there 40 + years. Would the chlorine increase the conductivity between the deteriorating wire insulation? Maybe going phase to phase? This one has me baffled, and I'm normally not baffled easily on troubleshooting.